8 unstable releases (3 breaking)
0.4.0 | Nov 19, 2023 |
---|---|
0.3.1 | Oct 2, 2023 |
0.3.0 | Jul 27, 2023 |
0.2.1 | Feb 8, 2023 |
0.1.1 | May 22, 2021 |
#631 in Encoding
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enumscribe
This crate provides derive macros for converting between simple enums and strings. It also includes derive macros for
serde::Serialize
and
serde::Deserialize
for simple enums.
Adding enumscribe to your project
Add to your Cargo.toml file:
[dependencies]
enumscribe = "0.4"
Derive macros and serde
support are enabled by default. They can be disabled by
setting default-features = false
.
It is also possible to use the enumscribe_derive
crate on its own without using the enumscribe
crate. However,
doing so means that you will only be able to derive serde::Serialize
and serde::Deserialize
.
Usage
There are a variety of different traits that you can derive. The "Scribe" traits are for converting from an enum to a string, and the "Unscribe" traits are for converting a string to an enum.
Basic usage
use enumscribe::{ScribeStaticStr, TryUnscribe};
#[derive(ScribeStaticStr, TryUnscribe, PartialEq, Eq, Debug)]
enum Airport {
#[enumscribe(str = "LHR")]
Heathrow,
#[enumscribe(str = "LGW")]
Gatwick,
#[enumscribe(str = "LTN")]
Luton,
}
// Convert an Airport to a &'static str
assert_eq!(Airport::Heathrow.scribe(), "LHR");
// Convert a &str to a Option<Airport>
assert_eq!(Airport::try_unscribe("LGW"), Some(Airport::Gatwick));
The #[enumscribe(str = "...")]
allows us to specify what string should be used to represent a particular variant. If
this is omitted, the name of the variant will be used instead.
Case insensitivity
The #[enumscribe(case_insensitive)]
attribute can be used to make the "Unscribe" traits perform case-insensitive
matching for a variant:
use enumscribe::TryUnscribe;
#[derive(TryUnscribe, PartialEq, Eq, Debug)]
enum Website {
#[enumscribe(str = "github.com", case_insensitive)]
Github,
#[enumscribe(str = "crates.io", case_insensitive)]
CratesDotIo,
}
assert_eq!(Website::try_unscribe("GiThUb.CoM"), Some(Website::Github));
The same attribute can be used on the enum itself to make all variants case-insensitive. Individual fields may opt back
in to case sensitivity with #[enumscribe(case_sensitive)]
.
use enumscribe::TryUnscribe;
#[derive(TryUnscribe, PartialEq, Eq, Debug)]
#[enumscribe(case_insensitive)]
enum Website {
#[enumscribe(str = "github.com")]
Github,
#[enumscribe(str = "crates.io")]
CratesDotIo,
}
assert_eq!(Website::try_unscribe("CrAtEs.Io"), Some(Website::CratesDotIo));
"other" variant
You can also have a variant which stores strings that could not be matched to any other variant. This is done using the
#[enumscribe(other)]
attribute. The variant should have a single field, which is a String
.
use std::borrow::Cow;
use enumscribe::{Unscribe, ScribeCowStr};
#[derive(ScribeCowStr, Unscribe, PartialEq, Eq, Debug)]
enum Website {
#[enumscribe(str = "github.com", case_insensitive)]
Github,
#[enumscribe(str = "crates.io", case_insensitive)]
CratesDotIo,
#[enumscribe(other)]
Other(String),
}
// Note that we don't need to use an Option anymore!
assert_eq!(Website::unscribe("github.com"), Website::Github);
// Unbelievably, websites exist other than github and crates.io
assert_eq!(Website::unscribe("stackoverflow.com"), Website::Other("stackoverflow.com".to_owned()));
// We can't scribe to a &'static str anymore, so we use a Cow<'static, str> instead
assert_eq!(Website::Github.scribe(), Cow::Borrowed::<'static, str>("github.com"));
assert_eq!(Website::Other("owasp.org".to_owned()).scribe(), Cow::Owned::<'static, str>("owasp.org".to_owned()));
Ignoring variants
If you need to, you can use #[enumscribe(ignore)]
to prevent a variant from being used by Scribe or Unscribe traits.
However, this means that converting the enum to a string can fail, so you must use TryScribe instead of Scribe in this case.
use enumscribe::TryScribeStaticStr;
#[derive(TryScribeStaticStr, PartialEq, Eq, Debug)]
enum Airport {
#[enumscribe(str = "LHR")]
Heathrow,
#[enumscribe(str = "LGW")]
Gatwick,
#[enumscribe(str = "LTN")]
Luton,
#[enumscribe(ignore)]
SecretExtraVariant(i32), // we have to ignore this variant because of the i32 field
}
assert_eq!(Airport::SecretExtraVariant(123).try_scribe(), None);
assert_eq!(Airport::Luton.try_scribe(), Some("LTN"));
Serde
You can derive serde::Serialize
and serde::Deserialize
using the same syntax:
use serde::{Serialize, Deserialize};
use enumscribe::{EnumSerialize, EnumDeserialize};
#[derive(EnumSerialize, EnumDeserialize, PartialEq, Eq, Clone, Copy, Debug)]
enum Airport {
#[enumscribe(str = "LHR")]
Heathrow,
#[enumscribe(str = "LGW")]
Gatwick,
#[enumscribe(str = "LTN")]
Luton,
}
#[derive(Serialize, Deserialize, PartialEq, Eq, Debug)]
struct Flight {
takeoff: Airport,
landing: Airport,
}
// There are probably much more economical ways of making this journey
let flight = Flight {
takeoff: Airport::Heathrow,
landing: Airport::Gatwick,
};
let flight_json = r#"{"takeoff":"LHR","landing":"LGW"}"#;
assert_eq!(serde_json::to_string(&flight).unwrap(), flight_json.to_owned());
assert_eq!(serde_json::from_str::<Flight>(flight_json).unwrap(), flight);
Traits table
Here is a table to show which traits you should derive, depending on your enum:
ignore used? |
other used? |
Conversion to string | Conversion from string |
---|---|---|---|
No | No | ScribeStaticStr |
TryUnscribe |
No | Yes | ScribeCowStr |
Unscribe |
Yes | No | TryScribeStaticStr |
TryUnscribe |
Yes | Yes | TryScribeCowStr |
Unscribe |
There are also ScribeString
and TryScribeString
traits which can be used in the same situations as ScribeCowStr
and TryScribeCowStr
, respectively.
These traits produce a String
rather than a Cow<'static, str>
, so they will always perform an allocation. Therefore, you should prefer the
ScribeCowStr
traits over the ScribeString
traits, unless you really don't want to use a Cow
for whatever reason.
Dependencies
~160KB